Hallucinations in older adults: A practical review
Autor: | Iris E. C. Sommer, Karina Stengaard Kamp, Dominic Ffytche, John-Paul Taylor, Daniel Collerton, Marieke I. Begemann, Johanna C. Badcock, John T. O'Brien, Romola S. Bucks, Michael Weinborn, Mohamad El Haj, India Kelsall-Foreman, Frank Larøi |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
Gerontology
TRANSCRANIAL MAGNETIC STIMULATION Aging Theme: Hallucinations Research in a Time of Crisis Hallucinations AcademicSubjects/MED00810 assessment SYMPTOM RATING-SCALES 03 medical and health sciences PSYCHOSIS 0302 clinical medicine VISUAL HALLUCINATIONS RIVASTIGMINE SCHIZOPHRENIA Theme Articles Humans Aged care older adults Aged training treatment Service provider Mental health aged-care EXPERIENCES PREVALENCE 030227 psychiatry Review article Psychiatry and Mental health PSYCHOMETRIC PROPERTIES Workforce Narrative review hallucinations Psychology AUDITORY VERBAL HALLUCINATIONS 030217 neurology & neurosurgery |
Zdroj: | Badcock, J C, Larøi, F, Kamp, K, Kelsall-Foreman, I, Bucks, R S, Weinborn, M, Begemann, M, Taylor, J P, Collerton, D, O'Brien, J T, El Haj, M, Ffytche, D & Sommer, I E 2020, ' Hallucinations in Older Adults : A Practical Review ', Schizophrenia Bulletin, vol. 46, no. 6, pp. 1382-1395 . https://doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sbaa073 Schizophrenia Bulletin |
ISSN: | 0586-7614 |
DOI: | 10.1093/schbul/sbaa073 |
Popis: | By 2050, it is estimated that 16% of people will be aged above 65 years, compared with 9% in 2019.1 Population aging is driving increased attention to the physical and mental health needs of older adults. Here, our focus is on hallucinations—given the wide range of health and aged-care service providers who encounter people with these experiences in their workplace. Hallucinations can be defined as “a perception-like experience with the clarity and impact of a true perception but without the external stimulation of the relevant sensory organ” 2 (cf. 3–5), though this belies the difficulty in discerning the boundaries between normal and abnormal perception.6 Hallucinations need to be distinguished from illusions, which are perceptual experiences in which an external stimulus is misperceived or misinterpreted.2 In practice, hallucinations vary in content (eg, perception of people, animals, or objects), character (eg, frequency, emotional valence, location), duration (from seconds to chronically present), complexity (eg, perception of simple stimuli vs organized scenes or objects), and quality (eg, perceived reality, intrusiveness) and occur in all sensory modalities. The terms used to refer to hallucinations are equally diverse publishedVersion |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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